What is PennHip?

XANADU Kennel only breeds male or female dogs with Excellent and Good OFA ratings OR a PennHip score of 85% or better.

Excellent: This classification is assigned for superior conformation in comparison to other animals of the same age and breed. There is a deep-seated ball (femoral head) which fits tightly into a well-formed socket (acetabulum) with minimal joint space. There is almost complete coverage of the socket over the ball.

Good: Good is slightly less than superior but a well-formed congruent hip joint is visualized. The ball fits well into the socket and good coverage is present.

PennHip is a way to grade the quality of dogs' hips. The phenotypic evaluation of hips done by the Orthopedic Foundation for Animals falls into seven different categories. Those categories are normal (Excellent, Good, Fair), Borderline, and Dysplastic (Mild, Moderate, Severe). Once each of the radiologists classifies the hip into one of the 7 phenotypes above, the final hip grade is decided by a consensus of the 3 independent outside evaluations. Examples would be:

Two radiologists reported excellent, one good—the final grade would be excellent One radiologist reported excellent, one good, one fair— the final grade would be good. One radiologist reported fair, two radiologists reported mild—the final grade would be mild. The hip grades of excellent, good and fair are within normal limits and are given OFA numbers. This information is accepted by AKC on dogs with permanent identification (tattoo, microchip) and is in the public domain. Radiographs of borderline, mild, moderate and severely dysplastic hip grades are reviewed by the OFA radiologist and a radiographic report is generated documenting the abnormal radiographic findings. Unless the owner has chosen the open database, dysplastic hip grades are not in the public domain.